Bold reality check: the era of effortless stock market gains may be nearing its end, and Wall Street is starting to notice.
Analysts are growing cautious about a potential “lost decade” for U.S. equities, with a growing chorus predicting that the S&P 500 could drift or underperform relative to global peers. The market’s recent surge has left many feeling that the party could be winding down, even as fresh highs keep the mood buoyant in the near term.
Two main reasons keep forecasters awake at night: valuations are stretched, and the current rally has stretched on for an unusually long period.
- Valuations are elevated. The S&P 500 trades around a price-to-earnings ratio near 27, above its 5-year average band (roughly 19.5–25.4). In addition, other widely watched indicators, like the Buffett indicator, have signaled overvaluation in recent analysis.
- The bull market is aging. The S&P 500 has risen more than 90% from its 2022 trough, and the broader move since 2009 has been a sustained secular uptrend. That long run raises questions about whether the next decade can deliver similar returns.
A growing number of institutions now project a muted or “flat-to-low-return” decade for U.S. stocks, with some suggesting the S&P 500 could barely move over the next ten years. For example, Bank of America’s equity strategists recently estimated the S&P 500 might fall around 0.1% over the coming decade, a stark contrast to its long-run historical average of roughly 10% annual gains since the mid-20th century.
Other voices echo this caution. Torsten Sløk, Apollo’s chief economist, argues that the current forward price-to-earnings ratio implies near-zero 10-year returns for the index. Goldman Sachs has likewise warned that U.S. stocks may trail international markets over the next decade, projecting roughly mid-single-digit annual gains for the S&P 500 compared with higher expected returns in Europe, Japan, Asia, and emerging markets. They also note that U.S. earnings growth could slow and that valuations could drift down about 1% per year if current conditions persist.
Bottom line: after a long stretch of strong performance, several respected forecasters are tempering expectations for the U.S. market. If the profitability or pricing power of the largest American firms falters, the broader market could face additional headwinds, unless fresh leadership emerges to lift the averages.
What do you think about this view? Do you agree that the U.S. market is headed for a prolonged period of muted returns, or do you see catalysts—like earnings surprises, structural innovations, or policy shifts—that could re-ignite growth? Share your thoughts in the comments.